After nearly ten months pretty much in the dark--often literally, in
near-solitary confinement in the Quantico brig--Pvt. Bradley Manning
finally received massive mainstream media attention last week. Harsh
prison conditions, including forced nudity, for the man accused of
leaking hundreds of thousands of classified documents to WikiLeaks
finally drew widespread condemnation on the editorial pages of major
newspapers and other news outlets, and from many others.

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Activists and bloggers had raised the issue for months to little
avail until Hillary Clinton's chief State Department spokesman, P.J.
Crowley, joined them, leading to Crowley's forced exit--and sparking
widespread outrage.

But how much do we know about how Manning, his legal case and
incarceration reached this point? Most people still know little. My
book Bradley Manning: Truth and Consequences-- the first book about him--was published yesterday as an e-book here and print here. Below is the first excerpt from the book .

Bradley
E. Manning was born on December 17, 1987, in Crescent, Oklahoma, a town
of a little more than a thousand people in the central part of the
state. If the name of the town sounds familiar it's probably because it
was once the site of the Kerr-McGee nuclear fuel processing facility
that became famous thanks to Karen Silkwood, a young technician and
union activist there who informed the Atomic Energy Commission about
radiation hazards at the plant in the summer of 1974. Frustrated by the
lack of response, she decided to leak documents to a New York Times reporter. After a union meeting in the town's Hub Cafe on November 13, 1974, she left to meet him in Oklahoma City.

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She never got there. Silkwood died when her car struck a culvert,
and the cause has been debated ever since. The crash was portrayed
ambiguously in the 1983 film Silkwood (starring Meryl Streep
and Cher in Oscar-nominated roles). Did Silkwood simply doze off? Or
was her car rammed from behind by a Kerr-McGee goon? Friends claimed
she had received several threatening phone calls that autumn. The
documents and binder intended for the Times reporter, perhaps
in her Honda at the time of the crash, were never found. In any event,
her death brought significant attention to problems at the plant,
including the misplacing of 44 to 66 pounds of plutonium. Kerr-McGee
closed the site in 1975 and Crescent's population has dropped by about
one-quarter since.

Crescent residents still argue about Silkwood today: Hero or
political malcontent? Straight or gay? Murder or accident? And what
exactly was in her "leak"?

A couple of decades after Silkwood's death, Manning grew up with his
family out in the countryside in a two-story house near the end of a
gravel road. As a technician for five years in the Navy in the 1970s,
Brian Manning was stationed for a time at Cawdor Barracks, a U.S. base
near Haverfordwest in Wales. There he met Susan Fox, who lived nearby.
After marriage, they moved to Crescent, from where Brian commuted to
his tech job with Hertz Rent-a-Car in Oklahoma City. Susan gave birth
to a daughter, Casey, and then in 1987, Bradley arrived.

Since Brian Manning had to spend a lot of time away from home, his
son learned to fend for himself. Neighbors who watched Bradley grow up
told reporter Denver Nicks for a profile that his father "was just real
demeaning" or words to that effect. Former friends of the boy say he
developed a reputation for being a "quiet but not exactly anti-social
kid." Sometimes he hacked into computer games. Longtime friend Jordan
Davis later told NBC that he was someone who "often got under his
classmates' skin."

Bradley went to Crescent schools from kindergarten through eighth
grade. Slight of build, he played the saxophone in a band, avoided
sports and was a good student for the most part. He was outspoken about
government and religion and would get into arguments in class. On
religion, Bradley stood out from his peers in the Bible Belt of
Oklahoma in openly mocking religion. Former classmates recall he would
refuse to say the Pledge of Allegiance, presumably because of the
"under God" part of the Pledge. And, although he was raised Catholic,
he claimed he never believed a word of it.

Just into the first semester of eighth grade, his father came home
and told his mother that he wanted a divorce. This inspired Bradley to
tell Davis and another pal that he was gay. Then he moved with his
mother to Wales.

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In Haverfordwest, he was not comfortable with telling others that he
was gay and became more introverted, quiet at school when not
irritable. A fellow student, James Kirkpatrick, found Manning to be
"different and interesting," according to Ed Caesar in a story about
Bradley's years in Wales for The Sunday Times of London.
Manning would show off his computer expertise, a skill that Kirkpatrick
found to be "awesome." Everything that made bullies want to pick on the
undersized Manning made Kirkpatrick interested in being his friend.

"He stuck out," Kirkpatrick told Caesar. "Very quirky, very
opinionated, very political, very clever, very articulate. He could be
quite anxious and frustrated, and people used to bully him a little bit
to try and get a reaction out of him" He never told me he was gay, I
don't think he told anyone. There was one boy in our year who everyone
knew was gay, and he got absolutely tormented for it. I think Bradley
must have seen that and thought, no thanks."

Upon finishing high school, he returned to Oklahoma, lived with his
dad and began work for a software company. Then, according to friends,
his father found out he was gay and kicked him out. Bradley turned to
old friend Jordan Davis for help and, after living out of a car for
awhile, he stayed with Davis in Tulsa. He moved from low-wage job to
low-wage job, from F.Y.E. to Incredible Pizza. He drifted to Chicago,
then to Potomac, Maryland, where he moved in with an aunt. He took jobs
at Starbucks and Abercrombie & Fitch, enrolled in a few community
college classes and earned enough money to take a trip to Chicago for a
music festival.